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Posts Tagged ‘diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders’

Question by Michael Brian: What addictions does the APA recognize as actual addiction disorders?
I know technically anything can be an “addiction” but I’m trying to find a list that the APA has put out that lists the actual addictions someone can be diagnosed with.

Best answer:

Answer by Peachy Perfect
Depends on what you count as an addiction. The DSM-IV (current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) doesn’t have a definition for the word “addiction” and doesn’t use it.

As far as what *you* might classify as an “addiction”, you can be diagnosed with either Substance Abuse or Substance Dependence, depending on the severity of the addiction. This involves either the dependence on or abuse of substances, like alcohol, heroin, caffeine –yes, I said caffeine–, cocaine, nicotine, etc.

As far as other “addictions” to non-substances go, the ones found under the “Impulse Control Disorders” category include:
– Pathological Gambling (people addicted to gambling)
– Kleptomania (people addicted to stealing)
– Pyromania (people addicted to setting fires)
– Trichotillomania (people addicted to pulling their hair out — yes, I’m serious)

There are lots of other disorders, including but definitely not limited to pedophilia and hypochondriasis, which you might consider addictions (pedophilia being when you are “addicted” to sexual endeavors with children, hypochondriasis being when you are “addicted” to being sick), but I don’t really count those under the “addictions” category, personally.

However, in the DSM-5, which is set to come out in May 2013, they are going to add a ton more disorders involving addictions under the category “Substance Use and Addictive Disorders”. But mostly the only change that will be made is specifying the type of substance that one is abusing, dependent on, and/or suffering withdrawals from. For example, instead of being diagnosed with plain “Substance Abuse” with alcohol listed as a side note, an alcoholic would be diagnosed with “Alcohol Use Disorder”, “Alcohol Intoxication”, and/or “Alcohol Withdrawal”.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Question by Michael Brian: What addictions does the APA recognize as actual addiction disorders?
I know technically anything can be an “addiction” but I’m trying to find a list that the APA has put out that lists the actual addictions someone can be diagnosed with.

Best answer:

Answer by Peachy Perfect
Depends on what you count as an addiction. The DSM-IV (current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) doesn’t have a definition for the word “addiction” and doesn’t use it.

As far as what *you* might classify as an “addiction”, you can be diagnosed with either Substance Abuse or Substance Dependence, depending on the severity of the addiction. This involves either the dependence on or abuse of substances, like alcohol, heroin, caffeine –yes, I said caffeine–, cocaine, nicotine, etc.

As far as other “addictions” to non-substances go, the ones found under the “Impulse Control Disorders” category include:
– Pathological Gambling (people addicted to gambling)
– Kleptomania (people addicted to stealing)
– Pyromania (people addicted to setting fires)
– Trichotillomania (people addicted to pulling their hair out — yes, I’m serious)

There are lots of other disorders, including but definitely not limited to pedophilia and hypochondriasis, which you might consider addictions (pedophilia being when you are “addicted” to sexual endeavors with children, hypochondriasis being when you are “addicted” to being sick), but I don’t really count those under the “addictions” category, personally.

However, in the DSM-5, which is set to come out in May 2013, they are going to add a ton more disorders involving addictions under the category “Substance Use and Addictive Disorders”. But mostly the only change that will be made is specifying the type of substance that one is abusing, dependent on, and/or suffering withdrawals from. For example, instead of being diagnosed with plain “Substance Abuse” with alcohol listed as a side note, an alcoholic would be diagnosed with “Alcohol Use Disorder”, “Alcohol Intoxication”, and/or “Alcohol Withdrawal”.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Heroin is making a deadly comeback
When he confessed to her in early 2009 that he had begun taking drugs again, she thought it could be prescription pills or cocaine, or maybe the methamphetamine that he had struggled with before. “When he … Of the 25 death investigations that the …
Read more on Tuscaloosa News (subscription)

Sex Addiction Does Not Appear To Be A Disorder, UCLA Study Says (VIDEO)
And yet, the American Psychiatric Association excluded sex addiction as a disorder in the latest edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the DSM-5. Prause conceded that her findings are controversial and told CBS in the …
Read more on Huffington Post

Dead lawyers and dying young people
Many people ask me how I am able to work with the finances of people like lottery winners and injury victims, where statistics show that the overwhelming majority will run through their money in five years or less. I finally realized that … Although …
Read more on Richmond Register

Help My Child's Addicted to Computer Games
I'm addicted to catapult games, physics games, Bubble Breaker, Tetris. According to the Daily Mail, it's worse than 'crack cocaine'. People enter the room and I don't even grunt hello. These games are designed to be challenging but within reach, reward …
Read more on Huffington Post UK

Internet Addiction Identification & Prevention Information Released
Internet Addiction & Internet Use Gaming Disorder are two hotly debated issues being discussed now that the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-V) is formally being released to the professional community and public. Researched …
Read more on PR Web (press release)

Teen smartphone addiction correlates with psychopathology
He and his coinvestigators measured the severity of smartphone or computer Internet addiction using a 2010 smartphone addiction rating scale and the Kimberly Young Internet Addiction Test. They evaluated psychopathology scores using the Korean Youth …
Read more on Clinical Psychiatry News Digital Network

Caught in the net
It is no surprise therefore that the latest edition of the worldwide psychiatric profession's bible, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), will include a possible new addiction, ''internet-use disorder''. In recognition of …
Read more on Otago Daily Times

Vermont substance abuse programs could see stress under federal health
National statistics examined by the AP indicated that about 53,000 Vermonters, out of an overall population of about 626,000, need substance abuse treatment; about 5,000 are getting it now. Many of those not getting treatment simply have not made the …
Read more on The Republic

Looking beyond addiction in society's moments of clarity
Previous. Next. Gallery Image. 1/4. (From left) Geoff Hughes, Michele Law, and Christine Barnhart look on as Jason Page, current resident of Foundation House, shares his story of addiction and recovery. … It is classified as an Axis I disorder in the …
Read more on The Martlet

Will Wooton: The mind of the teen drug user
Between family issues, school issues, peer pressure, addiction trends in the family, psychological makeup, there are many influences and many factors. … As you enter the world of drug use and recovery, you'll often hear “It's a process. … According …
Read more on Pomerado Newspaper Group

Op-ed: Mark Mullan has a treatable disease: addiction
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders identifies alcohol dependence as a disease. … Addiction is a treatable disease. People who are addicted can conquer their addiction. There is hope. There is help. We know this firsthand …
Read more on The Seattle Times

Haiku Reviews: From A 'Bollywood Invasion' To A 'Secret Garden' Opera
The whole time Dadson is directing his pigments into this picture-planar tug of war he minimizes any sense of manual intervention in the material; if there are any “brushstrokes,” the paint seems to make them itself. The powerful (if not entirely raw …
Read more on Huffington Post

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